postimg
Apr 2011 27

by Blogbot

This Sunday (May 1st) our very special in-studio guest is Quinn Luke of Bing Ji Ling, who’ll be performing a special in-studio acoustic set featuring songs from his super cool new album, Shadow to Shine.

SG Radio’s “Nude Music” Acoustic Sessions – Because songs are better naked.

Listen to SG Radio live Sunday night from 10 PM til Midnight on Indie1031.com

Got questions? Then dial our studio hotline digits this Sunday between 10 PM and midnight PST: 877-900-1031

Busy on Sunday? Then find all our podcasts at http://suicidegirlsradio.blip.tv/ and listen at your leisure.

And don’t forget to follow us on Twitter.

[..]

postimg
Apr 2011 26

by Aaron Detroit

“You can protest all day, but you gotta go drinking at night.”
– Al Jourgensen

Al Jourgensen has just released the last chapter in the annals of his nearly three decade-long career as the self-professed “maniac” behind industrial godfathers Ministry. It’’s appropriately titled The Last Sucker and also serves as the final piece in Ministry’s trilogy of albums attacking the Bush Administration and the United States’ current political system. Al is also throwing one last party, in the shape of a world tour and a “party album” of covers, before he splits to allow fans a chance to say goodbye and dance with him on Ministry’’s grave.

[..]

postimg
Apr 2011 25

by Erin Broadley

“I’’m really able to tell a story and make emotion come to life.”
– Debbie Harry

Before punk and new wave erupted in New York City in the late ’70s, female pop singers were like carefully crafted charms dangled from a bracelet; they were chanteuses whose sexuality was packaged as the ultimate pop commodity. When the tokenism of ’60s rock finally gave way to the rebel yell of late ’70s and early ’80s punk, female singers pushed a brazen, me-first attitude and redefined tough-girl with a heart of gold, or in Debbie Harry’s case, the romantic she is, a heart of glass. And though some said she was too beautiful for punk, Debbie Harry was more than just somebody’s darling.

[..]

postimg
Apr 2011 22

by Keith Daniels

“I can play every instrument but, like, really shitty.”
– Seth Bogart

Hunx and His Punx are a Bay Area punk band fronted by Arizona transplant and sometime hairdresser Seth Bogart, a.k.a. Hunx, that have a Ramones-like musical philosophy: take ‘60s Phil Spector-ish girl group music and simplify and speed it up. Their songs are mostly direct odes to love and sex, sung in Hunx’ distinctly nasal delivery, supported by the lovely harmonies of his all-female backing group. Having just released their first full-length album, Too Young To Be In Love, and played a solid week at SXSW, Hunx and his punkettes are now embarking on a nationwide tour — so I was lucky Seth found a few minutes to talk with SuicideGirls about why SXSW sucks, getting stoned, and French perverts.

[..]

postimg
Apr 2011 21

by Blogbot


Fellow Hello Kitty aficionado Dave Navarro, who won a Golden God for his tireless work upholding the rock & roll tradition of Bootie Calls.

While SuicideGirls is vehemently anti-red carpet, it’s 100% legitimate for us to cover the Golden Gods’ black one. The third installment of Revolver Magazine’s annual celebration of all things hard ‘n’ heavy took place last night at the Nokia Theatre in DTLA. We were there with our camera at the ready…

[..]

postimg
Apr 2011 21

by Blogbot

This Sunday (April 24th) our very special in-studio guest is Scott Russo of Unwritten Law, who’ll be performing a special in-studio acoustic set featuring songs from the band’s awesome new album, Swan.

SG Radio “Nude Music” Acoustic Sessions – Because songs, like women, are better naked.

Listen to SG Radio live Sunday night from 10 PM til Midnight on Indie1031.com

Got questions? Then dial our studio hotline digits this Sunday between 10 PM and midnight PST: 877-900-1031

Busy on Sunday? Then find all our podcasts at http://suicidegirlsradio.blip.tv/ and listen at your leisure.

And don’t forget to follow us on Twitter.

[..]

postimg
Apr 2011 19

by Darrah de jour

On Saturday night, the bold and the brightest came out (both literally and figuratively) to support the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center’s Evening With Women, raising almost $500,000 for its many programs, including LGBT youth advocacy and HIV/AIDS healthcare. It coincided with the non-profit establishment’s 40th anniversary, cementing it as a stronghold in the movement toward queer and women’s equal rights.

[..]